McDonald's breakthrough: Weird places to find the golden arches

Chat with us in Facebook Messenger. Find out what's happening in the world as it unfolds.

Photos:Where in the world has McDonald's made it?

Russia – The McDonald's restaurant on Pushkin Square in Moscow was the chain's first in Russia; it opened on January 31, 1990, and is still the company's largest branch.

Hide Caption

1 of 9

Photos:Where in the world has McDonald's made it?

Israel – Israelis eat at a kosher McDonald's restaurant in Tel Aviv. After being pressured by Tel Aviv's Chief Rabbi, two of the city's McDonald's branches changed the color of their trademark signs to blue, indicating the availability of kosher food.

Hide Caption

2 of 9

Photos:Where in the world has McDonald's made it?

Guantanamo Bay – There's even a McDonald's branch within the compound at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay. The company says it has no plans to open other restaurants on the island of Cuba.

Hide Caption

3 of 9

Photos:Where in the world has McDonald's made it?

Bosnia Herzogovina – People wait in line at the first Bosnian McDonald's restaurant in the capital, Sarajevo, which opened in 2011 after a four year battle with local shop and cafe owners, and the country's government.

Hide Caption

4 of 9

Photos:Where in the world has McDonald's made it?

India – In deference to Hindu and Muslim sensitivities, McDonald's restaurants in India serve no pork or beef products; instead they offer the chicken "Maharaja Mac" as a substitute to the traditional "Big Mac" beef burger.

Hide Caption

5 of 9

Photos:Where in the world has McDonald's made it?

Morrocco – Non-Muslims eat lunch on the terrace of a McDonald's in Rabat, Morocco. Muslim adults are forbidden from being served at the restaurant during the day during fasting for the holy month of Ramadan.

Hide Caption

6 of 9

Photos:Where in the world has McDonald's made it?

Kuwait – A McDonald's sign in front of a minaret in Kuwait City. The fast food giant has managed to succeed in many Gulf states, including Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Hide Caption

7 of 9

Photos:Where in the world has McDonald's made it?

Saudi Arabia – A segregation board separates men and women at a McDonald's in Riyadh in 2004. Restaurants in Saudi Arabia are divided into a family section and a section for men.

Hide Caption

8 of 9

Photos:Where in the world has McDonald's made it?

Iraq – A fast-food restaurant in Iraqi town of Sulaymaniyah -- it's not the real thing, but is it close enough?

Story highlights

More than 70 years after it was founded, McDonald's operates in more than 100 countries

But not all of its branches are without controversy: Take a look at some of them

As McDonald's opens its first restaurant in Vietnam, take a look at some of the big breakthroughs the fast food chain has made in the past -- from its first outlet in the Soviet Union, through the Kosher Mac and MacMaharaja, to the branch at Guantanamo Bay.

Russia

It took McDonald's 14 years of intense negotiations to convince the Communist leaders of the Soviet Union to allow the chain to set up their first restaurant. Yet almost as soon as the Iron Curtain began to fall, the first McDonald's opened in Moscow's busy Pushkin Square -- on January 31, 1990.

The restaurant seated 700 diners and its opening attracted thousands of people, who queued for hours to spend the equivalent of weeks' salaries on a single burger.

The company says the Moscow branch is still the largest McDonald's in the world.

JUST WATCHED

RidicuList: McDonald's 'hamburglars'

MUST WATCH

McDonald's restaurants around the world cater to local demands by including their own versions of regional specialties on the menu: in Israel, that's the "MacKebab."

Guantanamo BayU.S. Navy base

The McDonald's within the compound at Guantanamo Bay naval base is the only branch of the fast food chain on the island of Cuba. The restaurant is only accessible to the base's personnel and the chain says it has no plans to open any other branches in Cuba.

Bosnia and Herzegovina

McDonald's spent more than four years trying to break into the Bosnian market, but opposition from local shop owners, supported by the government, was fierce. The chain finally opened its first branch in the country in 2011.

McDonald's Arabia

McDonald's has managed to succeed in many Middle Eastern countries, offering various culturally- and religiously appropriate specialties to its Muslim customers.

The company's first venture into the Arab world was Morocco, where it opened its first branch in Casablanca in 1992.

Most branches respect Ramadan, restricting service in fasting periods during the holy month, and offering special menus at night.

Certified halal-quality food is widely available, and the restaurant tries to reflect the local tastes by offering the MacArabia Chicken Sandwich, served in folded Arabic bread.

The global hamburger chain is a big success in India, where it operates 300 branches.

McDonald's offers special meals to please the palates of local customers; it does not serve any beef or pork-based burgers, reflecting the religious beliefs of many Indians. Instead, it offers the Chicken MacMaharaja and the McAloo Tikki -- a vegetarian-friendly blend of spicy potatoes and peas.

Iraq

OK, it's not really the real deal, but McDonald's could still claim it as a win -- of sorts... As on other U.S. military bases around the world, McDonald's food used to be available within Baghdad's Green Zone.

And while the chain is not planning to expand into the country, a successful knock-off fast food restaurant "MaDonald's" in the town of Sulaymaniyah has been popular with locals since it opened there in the 1990s.